methods and apparatus for splitting golay sequences into a plurality of subsets of sequence elements and transmitting the subsets are described. The sequence subsets include an equal number of elements, e.g., symbols, from the split sequence and are transmitted using one group of tones per subset. The tones in each group of tones are uniformly spaced with one symbol being transmitted on each tone. The groups of tones are separated from one another by a frequency spacing which is greater, e.g., many times greater, than the frequency spacing between the tones in each group. Low peak to average power ratios are achieved for the transmitted signals while at the same time allowing for a wide band of frequencies to be used to transmit the split sequence. This leads to greater frequency diversity and facilitates frequency and phase related signal measurements by a device receiving the signal.
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1. A communications method, the method comprising:
generating a first set of complex values, the phases of said complex values being a golay sequence, said first set of complex values being subdivided into a first plurality of subsets, each subset in said first plurality of subsets having the same number of elements; and transmitting each of said first plurality of subsets using a plurality of uniformly spaced tones, a different group of tones being used to transmit each of said subsets, the tones within each group being separated from one another in frequency by a first amount, each group of tones used for transmitting one of said first plurality of subsets being separated in the frequency domain from the nearest one of said groups of tones used for transmitting one of said first plurality of subsets by a second amount which is greater than said first amount.
16. A communications system, comprising:
a first communications device including: means for generating a first set of complex values whose phase constitute a golay sequence, said first set of complex values being subdivided into a first plurality of subsets, each subset in said first plurality of subsets having the same number of elements; and means for transmitting each of said first plurality of subsets using a plurality of uniformly spaced tones, a different group of tones being used to transmit each of said subsets, the tones within each group being separated from one another in frequency by a first amount, each group of tones used for transmitting one of said first plurality of subsets being separated in the frequency domain from the nearest one of said groups of tones used for transmitting one of said first plurality of subsets by a second amount which is greater than said first amount. 14. A communications method, the method comprising:
generating a first set of complex values, the phases of said complex values being a golay sequence, said first set of complex values being subdivided into a first plurality of subsets, each subset in said first plurality of subsets having the same number of elements; and transmitting each of said first plurality of subsets using a plurality of uniformly spaced tones, a different group of tones being used to transmit each of said subsets, the tones within each group being separated from one another in frequency by a first amount, each group of tones used for transmitting one of said first plurality of subsets being separated in the frequency domain from the nearest one of said groups of tones used for transmitting one of said first plurality of subsets by a second amount which is greater than said first amount; generating a second set of complex values whose phase constitute a golay sequence, said second set of complex values being subdivided into a second plurality of subsets, each subset in said second plurality of subsets having the same number of elements; and transmitting each subset in said second plurality of subsets using a plurality of uniformly spaced tones, a different group of tones being used to transmit each of said subsets, the tones within each group being separated from one another in frequency by a third amount, each group of tones used for transmitting one of said second plurality of subsets being separated in the frequency domain from the nearest one of said groups of tones used for transmitting one of said second plurality of subsets by a fourth amount which is greater than said third amount, wherein said third and fourth amount are a function of the time said second set of complex values is transmitted.
2. The communications method of
3. The communications method of
4. The communications method of
wherein said first set of complex values includes N values, N being an integer power of 2, and wherein said first plurality of subsets includes X subsets, where X is equal to a power of 2.
8. The method of
generating a second set of complex values whose phase constitute a golay sequence, said second set of complex values being subdivided into a second plurality of subsets, each subset in said second plurality of subsets having the same number of elements; and transmitting each subset in said second plurality of subsets using a plurality of uniformly spaced tones, a different group of tones being used to transmit each of said subsets, the tones within each group being separated from one another in frequency by a third amount, each group of tones used for transmitting one of said second plurality of subsets being separated in the frequency domain from the nearest one of said groups of tones used for transmitting one of said second plurality of subsets by a fourth amount which is greater than said third amount.
9. The method of
10. The method of
11. The method of
operating a base station to receive a signal including the transmitted subsets of complex values; operating the base station to generate a time delay estimate from at least a portion of the received signal corresponding to the transmitted subsets of complex values.
12. The method of
operating the base station to transmit a timing control signal to said mobile node, said timing control signal being a function of said generated time delay estimate.
13. The method of
15. The method of
17. The communications system of
wherein said first set of complex values includes N values, N being an integer power of 2, and wherein said first plurality of subsets includes X subsets, where X is equal to a power of 2.
20. The communications system of
a base station including: means for receiving a signal including the transmitted subsets of complex values; and means for generating a time delay estimate from at least a portion of the received signal corresponding to the transmitted subsets of complex values. 21. The communications system of
means for transmitting timing control signal to said mobile node, said timing control signal being a function of said generated time delay estimate.
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The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/370,525, titled "PHASE SEQUENCES FOR TIMING AND ACCESS SIGNALS", which was filed on Apr. 5, 2002 and which is hereby expressly incorporated by reference.
The present invention is directed to methods and apparatus for transmitting signals suitable for use in timing recovery in wireless communication systems, e.g., frequency division multiplexed (FDM) systems.
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) has emerged as a viable scheme for wireless communications. In OFDM schemes signals are modulated onto multiple carriers in the frequency domain and then transformed, usually via a Fast Fourier Transform (FFT), to produce the time domain version of the signal. One drawback of OFDM systems concerns their high peak-to-average power ratio requirements. This refers to the fact that the transmitted signals in OFDM schemes, when viewed in the time domain, often exhibit large excursions in amplitude. If the transmitter seeks a high fidelity transmission then the dynamic range of the transmitter must be correspondingly large, so as not to distort these large excursions. This has two effects. One is that it increases the cost of power amplifiers required in the transmitter. The second is that signals cannot be transmitted at full power since power margins must be left to allow for occasional large excursions.
Golay sequences are sequences of symbols, e.g., QPSK symbols, that exhibit low peak to average power ratios both in the frequency domain and the time domain when the symbols of the sequence are transmitted using uniformly spaced tones. In the prior art, it was generally assumed that to obtain the benefit of low peak to average power ratios the symbols of the Golay sequence had to be transmitted using uniformly spaced tones in the frequency domain. It has been proposed to use such sequences for transmission in OFDM systems with the sequences being transmitted using a contiguous set of uniformly spaced tones as shown in FIG. 1.
In
In many cases, it is desirable to maximize the frequency range over which tones are transmitted. The greater range of frequencies can provide a degree of frequency diversification and increase the ability to accurately measure transmission delays as a function of signal phase shift. Unfortunately, the existing requirement for the tones of a Golay sequence to be transmitted using uniformly spaced tones to obtain the known benefits of such a signal limits the utility of such sequences.
Another difficulty associated with the use of Golay sequences is that there are relatively few Golay sequences so high communication rates are difficult to obtain this way. Nevertheless, there may be certain circumstance in which the use of Golay sequences or Golay like sequences is desirable.
OFDM systems require timing synchronization between the transmitter and receiver. In, e.g., a mobile wireless setting, this normally requires that the mobile transmit a signal that can be used to synchronize the two participants. Timing is typically determined by examining phase offsets of the received signal as a function of frequency. Different frequencies experience different phase offsets as a function of transmission delay. Generally, the greater the difference in frequency between signals, e.g., symbols, used to estimate the transmission delay in this manner, the greater the accuracy of the transmission timing delay estimate.
Another related system function is access. A mobile often requests access to the base station before it begins transmitting its user information. An access signal should indicate to the base station that the mobile is requesting access to that particular base station. The access signal should be recognizable by the base station as an access signal intended for that base station. The signal transmitted by the mobile should therefore indicate the identity of the base station to which it is requesting access. In order to conserve mobile power, minimize out of band transmission, and/or admit high energy transmission of access signals without undue distortion, the access request signal should, preferably, also exhibit a low peak to average power ratio.
In view of the above discussion, it can be appreciated that improved signaling techniques suitable for use in FDM systems, e.g., mobile OFDM systems, are desirable. For example, there is a need for improved signals which can be transmitted and examined to accurately detect transmission timing delays. In addition, there is a need for efficient access request signals, e.g., symbol sequences, with low peak to average ratios which can be associated with different base stations.
While Golay sequences offer some possible advantages with regard to satisfying these two needs, the restriction that the elements of the Golay sequence need to be transmitted using uniformly spaced frequencies needs to be overcome if such sequences or similar sequences are to be highly useful.
The present invention is directed to methods and apparatus for signaling timing and access information in wireless systems, e.g. frequency division multiplexed mobile systems. Exemplary systems in which the present invention may be used are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/805,887 titled Signaling Method in an OFDM Multiple Access System.
In accordance with the present invention signals are used which are capable of serving the dual purpose of access request signals and signals which are used to determine transmission timing delays and/or errors. The signals are well suited for use in FDM wireless systems. While not precisely Golay sequences, the proposed signals are based on Golay sequences and exploit a certain recently discovered structure underlying Golay sequences.
In one exemplary embodiment, when a mobile desires access to a particular base station it first determines that base station's identifier. The mobile then transmits a timing and access signal, generated in accordance with the present invention, that is a function of that identifier so that the base station will recognize that a mobile is querying it for access. One feature of the invention is directed to a particular form for the transmitted signals.
OFDM transmission takes place by transmitting on equally spaced frequencies wi=w0+iwδ i=1, . . . , n. Roughly speaking, the complex baseband representation of a typically transmitted signal takes the form Σihiej(w,t). Average transmitted power is proportional to (Σihi2)1/2 while peak transmitted power is proportional to maxt|Σihiej(w,t)|. The peak-to-average power ratio is the ratio of these to quantities
and it is desirable in practice that this quantity be small.
Golay sequences are sequences hi for which the PAR is known to be quite small. In fact, it is known that PAR<21/2 for all Golay sequence. The Golay sequences come in complementary pairs. As a canonical example we will consider Golay sequences of length 16.
Additional features and benefits of the methods, apparatus and signal sequences of the present invention will be apparent in view of the detailed description which follows.
The receiver and transmitter circuits 322, 324 are coupled by a bus 325 to a memory 301, processor 314 and I/O devices 316, e.g., keypad and display. Processor 314, under control of one or more routines stored in memory 301 causes the mobile node 302 to operate in accordance with the methods of the present invention, e.g., to transmit sequences of symbols as described below and to respond to timing correction and/or timing control feedback signals received from a base station. In order to control mobile node operation, memory 301 includes communications routine 312. In addition, the memory includes transmission data 307, customer/mobile station data 308 and a scheduling routine 304. Transmission data 307 includes information identifying different Golay sequences which are used as base station identifiers and/or other signals such as access request signals. Information relating to how to split the Golay sequences for transmission purposes, e.g., in terms of the number of equally sized subsets the sequence is to be split into and the frequency gap between subsets to be used for transmission purposes may, and in various embodiments is, stored in transmission data 307.
Scheduling routine 304 controls the scheduling of signals to be transmitted. Such signals may include one or more Golay sequences which are to be split and transmitted in accordance with the present invention. Scheduling routine 304 is responsive to scheduling information received from a base station and schedules data transmissions at times authorized by a base station or at predetermined times. Scheduling routine 304, in various embodiments, causes different symbol sequences, e.g., the sequences shown in
Golay sequences of length 2k over MPSK alphabet have recently been shown to be representable as a finite union of certain shifts of a linear code whose basis over MPSK is a first order Reed-Muller code. In the case of length 16 Golay sequences over MPSK alphabets, the sequences are (See "Generalized Reed-Muller Codes and Power Control in OFDM Modulation" by Kenneth G. Paterson, August 1998, available at: http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/98/HPL-98-57R1.html as HP technical report #HPL-98-57R1) those vectors of elements from the complex unit circle whose phases are all linear combinations over Z/M (the integers modulo M) of the row vectors in the matrix
multiplied by 2π/M , summed with one of the following vectors
Thus, altogether, there are 12*M5 Golay sequences, where M represents the number of symbols in an MPSK alphabet used to define the sequence. It is these sequences which may be split and transmitted in accordance with the invention. For purposes of explaining the invention we shall assume M=4 (QPSK).
Let h1, . . . , h16 be a Golay sequence as above. Suppose that instead of using consecutive frequencies we use consecutive frequencies for h1, . . . , h8 and h9, . . . , h16. In addition we do not position the two groups adjacent to each other. Such splitting is useful to provide protection against frequency dependent fading. The PAR is still quite small, satisfying the Golay bound. The mathematical argument is the following.
The peak value (in time) of a Golay sequence signal over equally spaced frequencies is given by
and this quantity is known to satisfy the bound indicated above. If we split the sequence, using equally spaced frequencies but offsetting the second half of the sequence with respect to the first then the peak is given as
where w0'-w0 represents the frequency offset. Now, note that this maximum is given also by
where we set gk=hk for k=1, . . . , 8 and gk=ei(w
To capture timing (delay) there are advantages to spreading the signal to well separated points in the allocated frequency band as discussed above. Moreover, it can be desirable to randomize the locations of the signal in the band to minimize collisions between different mobiles trying to access the system at the same time. Second, spreading the signal offers some protection against frequency dependent fading. The above scheme enables the use of these features while retaining low peak to average power ratios.
In the case of access request signals, it is advantageous to have unique identifiers (of the base station) regardless of the separation and to avoid the need to undo the rotation caused by the shift. This can be accomplished by avoiding the use of the basis vector v2=(0 . . . 01 . . . 1) in the choice of signatures, e.g., symbol sequences. Moreover, in noncoherent wireless communication (communication where the channel is not known at the receiver) the basis vector v1=(1, . . . , 1) is irrelevant (unrecoverable) since the received signal undergoes an arbitrary constant phase shift depending on the distance of the mobile to the base station. The proposed Golay sequences offer the further advantage in this regard that they form a good code. That is, the Golay sequences are well separated in signal space reducing the probability of confusion.
We propose the use of split Golay signature sequences for access signals as well as for other signals. Such signals may be transmitted by a mobile node to a base station in accordance with the invention and then used to generate channel information. In the OFDM setting, these signals take the form, e.g., of h1, . . . , h8 on frequencies wi=w0+iwδ i=1, . . . , 8 and take the form h9, . . . , h16 i=9, . . . , 16 on frequencies wi=w0'+iwδ where h1 , . . . , h16 is a Golay sequence over, e.g., the QPSK alphabet, with v1 and v2 components set to 0 and, typically, we have w0' significantly larger, e.g., several times larger, than w0.
The general picture for the length 16 Golay sequences is as follows. Given a Golay sequence put on equally spaced tones, one can take any subset as indicated by one of the basis vectors v2, . . . , v5, where the is indicate the subset, and translate that subset in frequency, while fixing the spacing within the subset. For example, V3 can be used to select elements from a 16 element Golay sequence to form two subsets, a first subset including elements (S0, S1, S2, S3, S8, S9, S10, S11) and a second set (S4, S5, S6, S7, S12, S13, S14, S15). The resulting transmitted sequence will still have good peak to power average ratio properties. Furthermore, this translation of subsets may be performed more than once with different choices of the basis vectors and the good peak to average power ratio property still holds.
In the exemplary OFDM system the access signal is selected to be a function of a base station's identifier. However, in other embodiments, the access signal is generated in accordance with the present invention without being a function of the base station identifier.
By using signals generated in accordance with the invention the system accrues the following advantages. The signals are well separated in signal space from each other, being elements of code, and they are sufficient in number so that each base station can have a sequence distinct from all nearby neighbors, the signals can be spread out in the band providing robustness estimates of timing delay, portions of the signal may be clustered so that within a cluster phase rotation is nearly constant, and the signals exhibit low peak-to-average power ratios, allowing them to be transmitted at high power.
In accordance with the invention, a Golay sequence including N=2k complex symbols, is split into 2 subsets in up to k different ways as indicated by the basis vectors of the underlying first order Reed-Muller code. Each of the subsets includes half of the elements from the set to which the splitting operation was applied. For a given iteration half of the elements in the entire sequence will normally be shifted in frequency by the same amount. The splitting can be performed iteratively on the subsets produced by the splitting operation with the splitting performed during each iteration being performed in the same manner to each subset existing at the start of the iteration. This results in X=21 subsets for transmission purposes, where 1 is the number of different splits used, with each subset having NIX elements. The elements of each of the 21 subset are transmitted using equally spaced tones and relations between subsets arises from the limitation that any of the k possible translation subsets must be translated while maintaining their spacing, which may not be uniform if previous translations have occurred. In practice, the most useful cases will have 1=1 or 1=2 resulting in 2 or 4 subsets, respectively. The most useful arrangements will be groups of tones that are tightly spaced within groups but the groups themselves are spread out in frequency. This results in the groups of tones corresponding to the individual subsets being spaced apart from one another in the frequency domain by an amount which is at least several times the frequency spacing between tones in a group. The frequency spacing between multiple groups of tones used to transmit the subsets of Golay sequence members is usually uniform, the precise relations being determined by the translation construction. In various implementations the spacing between groups of tones is at least 5, 10 and 20 times the frequency spacing between tones in a tone group.
The symbols of a Golay sequence are split different ways in
While 16 symbol transmission sequence are shown for purposes of explaining the invention Golay sequences with other numbers of elements may be split and transmitted in accordance with the invention. Splitting and transmitting Golay sequences in accordance with the invention provides many of the low peak to average power advantages known to be associated with a Golay sequence transmitted using uniformly spaced tones while allowing elements of the sequence to be transmitted over a wider frequency range than would be possible in many cases if the elements had to be transmitted using a single set of uniformly spaced tones.
The wireless terminals of the present invention in
The generation and transmission of signals, e.g., access signals, in accordance with the invention can be performed using hardware, software and/or a combination of hardware and software. For example, in the
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